Response to Bodmer et al. Metformin and the Risk of Cancer: Time-Related Biases in Observational Studies. Diabetes Care 2012;35:2665–2673
نویسندگان
چکیده
In the comment by Bodmer et al. (1), the authors question our assertion that several of their studies suffered from time-window bias (2). Perhaps there are subtleties about this bias that need to be further clarified. In the authors’ breast cancer study (3), cases and controls were matched on age, sex (although all females), general practice, and index date (i.e., the calendar date of the breast cancer diagnosis). However, there was no matching on time since diabetes diagnosis or since the first prescription for an oral hypoglycemic agent. Not matching on this entry point can result in artificially different exposure patterns between cases and controls (a patient with 5 years’ diabetes duration has a greater chance of receiving a given drug than a patient with only 1-year duration), thus introducing time-window bias (4). Unlike immortal time bias, it is not possible, a priori, to predict the direction of this bias on the point estimates since it directly depends on the differential durations for exposure assessment in the cases and controls. In their letter, the authors state that the length of time in the database was similar between the breast cancer cases and controls (not mentioned in the article). This simply means that on average, cases and controls had similar durations, which can explain the overall null association observed with the use of metformin (odds ratio [OR] 5 1.03). However, it is possible that in certain subgroups such as patients who received $40 prescriptions of metformin, the duration of treated diabetes happened to be shorter in cases than in controls, resulting in OR 5 0.44. Note the ORs were all above 1.00 for the other prescription categories, including those who received between 10–39 metformin prescriptions (OR 5 1.09). To clarify this, it would be necessary to calculate the average duration of treated diabetes for the 17 cases and 120 controls, along with the referent nonusers, that generated this strong risk reduction. Moreover, the approach used by the authors to adjust for duration of diabetes was too crude and not the most appropriate one to address time-window bias. Finally, the authors raise the issue that any differential exposure opportunity would have affected the other antidiabetic agents as well. Here again, one would need to compare the durations of treated diabetes for the other antidiabetic agent subgroups and the respective nonusers. In other metformin studies conducted by the authors, cases and controls were matched on length of time in the database (5). While this may be an improvement over the breast cancer study (3), thismethod is still prone to time-window bias. Length of time in the database simply means that cases and matched controls have been registered in the database for the same amount of time. It does not guarantee the same duration of treated diabetes in cases and controls that would avoid time-window bias. In all, we thank the authors for this opportunity to clarify the bias and hope our article provides some methodological guidelines useful to avoid some of the vexing time-related biases in observational studies of important drug effects.
منابع مشابه
Comment on: Suissa and Azoulay. Metformin and the Risk of Cancer: Time-Related Biases in Observational Studies. Diabetes Care 2012;35:2665–2673
We agree with Suissa and Azoulay (1) that observational studies, particularly those of drug effects, can be subject to biases and that “timerelated” biases must be carefully controlled in these types of studies. In their recently published article (1), Suissa and Azoulay have attempted to “show that several of the observational studies investigating the association between metformin and cancer ...
متن کاملComment on: Suissa and Azoulay. Metformin and the Risk of Cancer: Time-Related Biases in Observational Studies. Diabetes Care 2012;35:2665–2673
In a recent article in Diabetes Care, Suissa and Azoulay (1) concluded that the impressive results of the metformin-associated reduced cancer risk were due to many researchers failing to adjust for immortal time bias and not using time-dependent analysis of drug exposure. However, this conclusion is not justified since it remains controversial whether immortal time would introduce substantial b...
متن کاملResponse to Yang and Chan. Metformin and the Risk of Cancer: Time-Related Biases in Observational Studies. Diabetes Care 2012;35:2665–2673
Y ang and Chan (1) express uncertainty regarding immortal time bias, an established and rigorously founded principle in epidemiology and statistical sciences, and use data from the Hong Kong Diabetes Registry to quantify the effect of statin use on cardiovascular outcomes. Using the time-fixed approach, known to introduce immortal time bias, they find that statin use is associated with a 34% re...
متن کاملMetformin and the Risk of Cancer
OBJECTIVE Time-related biases in observational studies of drug effects have been described extensively in different therapeutic areas but less so in diabetes. Immortal time bias, time-window bias, and time-lag bias all tend to greatly exaggerate the benefits observed with a drug. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS These time-related biases are described and shown to be prominent in observational stu...
متن کاملAre sulfonylurea and insulin therapies associated with a larger risk of cancer than metformin therapy? A retrospective database analysis.
OBJECTIVE Several meta-analyses of observational studies suggested that metformin use reduces cancer risk in type 2 diabetes. However, this result was not confirmed by the few available randomized controlled trials (RCTs), and many observational studies on metformin and cancer were potentially afflicted with time-related bias. We aimed to avoid this bias when comparing cancer incidence in users...
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عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 36 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2013